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YouTube rolls out feature to hide video end screens

YouTube viewers can now tap a hide button to remove end screen recommendations while still being able to bring them back anytime.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar's avatar
ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Sep 25, 2025, 6:58 AM EDT
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YouTube end screen video
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For anyone who’s ever waited for the last joke, the final beat, or the credits to roll — only to be ambushed by a wall of suggested videos and a giant “Subscribe” button — relief has arrived. YouTube is rolling out a tiny — but very welcome — “Hide” button that dismisses the end-screen popups that appear in the final seconds of many videos. Tap it, the clickable thumbnails and links go away, and you can actually watch the ending. Tap the new “Show” button and the recommendations come back.

What it does (and what it doesn’t)

The control is simple and local: the hide action only applies to the video you’re watching in that moment — it doesn’t switch off end screens globally across YouTube. Creators can still add end screens and watermarks as before; this is just a viewer-level toggle for those final seconds. YouTube framed the change as a response to viewers who asked to “focus on the content they’re watching.”

YouTube says the company tested the feature and found it had only a small effect on creator traffic: hiding end screens resulted in roughly a 1.5 percent drop in views that would otherwise have come from end-screen clickthroughs. That number is small enough that the company appears comfortable giving viewers the choice.

The desktop tweak: the vanished hover-to-subscribe

At the same time, YouTube is removing a nearly invisible desktop feature: the “hover-to-subscribe” button that used to appear when you pointed your mouse at a channel’s watermark. YouTube says the hover option produced almost no subscriptions (the company cites a figure around 0.05 percent of subscriptions coming via that path), and since the standard Subscribe button already appears under the player, it’s redundant. In short: less clutter, same subscribe mechanics.

Why this matters — for viewers and for creators

For viewers, the change is obvious and immediate: if you hate overlays that block a final reveal or credits, you now have a one-tap way to clear them from the screen. For creators, the impact appears minimal in aggregate, based on YouTube’s testing — but there are caveats. End screens are one of several nudges YouTube gives viewers to click to another video, subscribe, or watch more, and while a 1.5 percent dip sounds tiny in percentage terms, its absolute impact depends on a channel’s size and the role end-screen traffic plays for that creator’s growth. Still, YouTube’s data suggests most subscriptions and views come from other places on the platform, not that last-second overlay.

A feature that’s been in testing

This isn’t entirely new: YouTube began experimenting with an end-screen hide toggle earlier this year in test groups, appearing on mobile and desktop before the wider rollout. The company has been methodical — testing, measuring clickthrough and subscription effects — and now it’s pushing the change out more broadly.

A brief history and some practical notes

End screens were added to the creator toolbox as a replacement for older annotations — they’ve been around for years as a way to direct viewers to more content or a subscribe call-to-action. Creators who rely heavily on end screens can still place them, and YouTube continues to offer analytics for end-screen performance in YouTube Studio. If you’re a viewer who still wants to avoid end cards altogether, browser extensions have historically filled that gap — but now the platform itself offers the simpler, sanctioned option.

Bottom line

It’s a small UX tweak with an outsized payoff for the annoyed and the detail-oriented: a one-tap way to keep the last second of a video — the punchline, the credit roll, the applause — unobstructed. Creators shouldn’t panic (YouTube’s numbers show the hit to end-screen traffic was minor in testing), and viewers get the control they’ve been asking for. A very YouTube answer: keep the tools creators want, and give viewers the choice to use — or hide — them.


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